Tea Blog

Welcome to my Tea blog!

"The Tea Files"

My blog is all about tea (camellia sinensis). This segment of the tea files will focus on the Jirisan area of Hadong County, South Korea. Whether your a tea aficionado, tea connoisseur, tea enthusiast, or tea novice, I hope to provide you with selective information, stories, and my personal tea trekking adventures, and at times, pictures relating to tea and teaware.

Jirisan, Hwagae Valley, welcomes the arrival of the winter season. This is the time of the year when tea bushes (camellia sinensis) hibernate until the arrival of next year's (2015) spring harvest. The scene is quiet, peaceful, and cold. Snow blankets the picturesque Hwagae Valley landscape.

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays to all of our valued visitors and loyal customers from Jiri Mountain Tea!

I thank you for your patronage and hope to continue to provide you with the best possible service!

During autumn, one can see camellia sinensis (tea) shrubs flowering in semi-wild tea gardens on rocky hillsides or in the wild under bamboo groves when hiking in Jirisan. Usually, when I trek across Hwagae Valley I especially like to photograph not only the tea terrain but also the interesting birds, animals, colorful butterflies, while taking in the clean air.

Here, I came across a bee buzzing about and busily collecting nectar from a camellia sinensis flower. I could smell the distinctly sweet perfumed aroma of flowering camellia sinensis in the air when walking among the many tea shrubs.

The perfumed fragrance emanating from the tea flowers, the vibrant white petals, and the bright yellow stamen of camellia sinensis was to irresistable for this bee to pass up as one can see.

During early fall, I like to collect the nokcha (tea) flowers and make a delicious infusion from them. While the infused liquor from the flower is pale-looking, the taste is herbally sweet and flavorful.

In this article of 'The Tea Files', I am going to provide a very brief and humble review about the origin of Korea's Jirisan, Hwagae Valley, nokcha which is also referred to as the 'King's Tea.'

Below is a picture that I took of a neat poster which appears to be one of King Heungduk of the Shilla Kingdom or possbly King Sejong, the inventor of Hangeul, the Korean alphabet, pouring himself what may possibly be a cup of Hadong wild green tea.

Jirisan, Hwagae Valley tea seeds originated from the foggy and misty mountains of China. This particular tea plant is a hardy, slow growing camellia sinensis variety. The varietal is called camellia sinensis v. sinensis. It has small, slender tea leaves that can survive under very cold weather conditions recorded to be as as low as -5°C/23°F. This was an important consideration because the camellia sinensis varietal would have to be able to withstand very cold Korean winters. Presumably, Korean winters were much colder in those days.

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How did this tea varietal make its way to Korea?

The answer to this question, and by the way, this is a very short answer, I discovered at the Hadong Tea Cultural Museum in Hadong, Hwagae Valley, South Korea.

Hadong is considered to be the 'Holy Land' of tea according to historical records of the Samguk Sagi (The Three Kingdoms.)

In the Samguk Sagi, it has been recorded that Kim Dae Ryeom, a royal envoy during Korea's Shilla Dynasty in 828 AD., was ordered to go to China's Tang Dynasty by royal orders of King Heungduk. His mission was to return to Korea with camellia sinensis tea seeds on behalf of King Heungduk who was the reigning monarch at that time. It is also worth mentioning that at the time it was illegal to take tea seeds out of China because the Chinese allegedly wanted to keep a monoply on their valuable agricultural cash crop.

When Dae ryeom returned from China with the tea seeds, King Heungduk and Dae ryeom mapped out the ideal location to plant those first valuable tea seeds. It was determined that the prime growing location for those tea seeds would be on the southern facing slopes of Jirisan where they could flourish given the geography, nutrient rich soil, pristine rivers and streams, and ideal weather conditions for camellia sinensis to thrive in.

Several years later, it was a zen master by the name of Jin Gam, the founder of Ssanggye Temple, who began distributing tea around the local area and the culture of traditional tea (umm..) took root. From a historical and religious standpoint, Ssanggye Temple is reknowned as being one of the most sacred and oldest buddhist temples in Korea.

(Pictured below are steps leading to Ssanggye Temple's entrance)

A stone memorial near Ssanggyesa has been erected to mark the original location of the first tea cultivation site in Korea. The exact location is said to have been Unsuri, Hwagae Myeon, Hadong-gun, Gyeongnam Province.

Introducing this year's first freshly harvested, organically grown, Jungjak nokcha (green tea). It comes from a 3rd flush tea harvest which was handpicked and processed in early May 2014.

This tasty nokcha comes by way of well known Jirisan tea artisan and third generation tea farmer Cho Yun Seok of Jukro (Jook-ro) Tea Company. By the way, Jukro means 'bamboo dew'and Jukro Tea Company in Hwagae Valley is comparatively speaking a well-known mid-size tea company within Korea.

This pioneering tea family has been passionately growing and making nokcha since 1962 in Jirisan, Hwagae Valley and is known for producing a well-made uniquely tasting 'bamboo dew' green tea.

Currently, Jukro tea products are steadily becoming known to the international community where Mr. Cho's well made tasty tea products and his tireless marketing efforts have resulted in his company's products being exported to a few European countries.

Mr. Cho's passion for making tasty tea using traditional Korean tea processing methods can be experienced in this 2014 freshly harvested Jungjak tea offering. Minimally processed, this tea was vigorously tossed and hand roasted. He has to wear multiple pairs of gloves due to blistering hot temperatures that the iron cauldron reaches when he is roasting the tea leaves.

This freshly harvested well made and tasty organically grown Jungjak leaf nokcha (green tea) is now available!

So, what makes Jirisan, Hwagae green tea (nokcha) so special? Tea bushes have been planted on the southern slopes of Jiri Mountain in rocky, mineral rich soil and nourished with the best that mother nature has to offer in an ideal growing environment.

During March and April, one can feel the crisp misty mornings which deposit dew droplets on the surface of awakening tea leaves from their winter dormancy. It's an invigorating feeling for both humans and tea bushes.

Around mid- April, depending on weather conditions, is when the first choicest hand plucked tea buds mark the beginning of the annual spring tea harvest sometime before the first spring rainfall called 'Gogu' by Korean tea farmers. Gogu which is based on the Asian lunar calendar, and occurs around April 20 give or take one week before or after that date. The tea shrubs will usually experience cool mornings followed by sudden and rapid changes in daytime temperatures. It can be 10-15 celsius in the morning, then rise to 18-22 celsius by mid- afternoon. Sunny and breezy afternoons are followed by short intermittent rainfalls which are ideal conditions for growing highly fragrant and tasty bud and leaf tea.

So, the next time you sip Jirisan, Hwagae Valley green tea (nok-cha), if only for a fleeting moment, ponder the ideal conditions of geography, soil, climate, and the tea growers nurturing of the tea bushes which created that simple, but exquisite tasting cup of spring dew called ujeon (woo-jeon).

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Administrator's Note: Unless otherwise noted, the photos, images, and written content which appear on these websites; www.jirisan.webs.com ,www.jirimountaintea.com, and/or www.theteafiles.com and all associated webpages are original and the intellectual property of Gabriel Furnari (aka) Jirisan Gabriel. The unauthorized use of this website for commercial purpose(s) is strictly forbidden. Viewers and/or users of the previously mentioned websites and their associated pages, including www.theteafiles.com are not permitted to alter, amend, copy, reproduce, download , or redistribute its content in any manner or form; digitally, electronically, mechanically, or otherwise, without first receiving prior written permission from him. If expressed written permission is granted, then you must provide a clearly written reference to the websites www.jirisan.webs.com or www.jirimountaintea.com and/or its tea blog "The Tea Files" and provide a web link to it.